Daily Archives: February 13, 2008

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Buzz: Johnson Close To Deal With Mets

by D.J. Short on February 13th, 2008 at 8:09 pm

Jeremy Cothran of the Newark Star-Ledger reports that OF Ben Johnson is close to a minor-league deal with the Mets that includes an invite to spring training.

In 27 at-bats with the Mets last season, Johnson hit .185 with an RBI.

Johnson is recovering from torn ligaments in his left ankle and a broken left fibula suffered last August while playing with Triple-A New Orleans.

…last week, Willie Randolph reportedly stated that Johnson was resigned, but that appears to have been premature…either way, Johnson will have an uphill battle to make the major league roster…

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Reader: Duaner Sanchez Working Hard

by Chris Mazzone on February 13th, 2008 at 7:43 pm

Marty Noble at MLB.com takes a look at how far Duaner Sanchez has come after a year of rehabbing from a shoulder injury that kept him out all of last season.

according to Noble…

“He probably is ahead of every pitcher in camp and those who will report Thursday, the reporting day for pitchers and catchers. He twice has faced batters, pushed his pitch count to 50, and thrown [multiple bullpen sessions].”

Sanchez says…

“Now I’m in the best shape of my life, I haven’t looked like this since I was 19.  Everybody can see it. I feel great. I’m ready to do whatever they want me to do.”

…there’s no doubt that sanchez is going to be a critical component of the Mets’ bullpen if they’re to be an elite group this year…it’s encouraging to hear how good he feels, how hard he’s working, and about his new found appreciation for the game and all that he has…welcome back duaner, we certainly missed you…

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See: Mets In Camp

by D.J. Short on February 13th, 2008 at 6:15 pm

Adam Rubin of the Daily News provides photographs of several Mets in camp, courtesy of photographer Corey Sipkin, including Duaner Sanchez, Brian Schneider, Mike Pelfrey, Oliver Perez, John Maine and Juan Padilla.

…in the first picture we get a good look at Schneider‘s new one-piece catcher’s mask, which actually looks more like a goalie mask…

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Note: Santana Arrives

by D.J. Short on February 13th, 2008 at 4:32 pm

At his blog for the New York Times, among other tidbits from Port St. Lucie, Ben Shpigel wrote the following…

“The news you have all been waiting for. OK, maybe that’s too strong. But Johan Santana made a surprise appearance Wednesday afternoon and threw on flat ground for 15 minutes with the pitching coach Rick Peterson and the bullpen coach Guy Conti watching.”

…it’s almost here, folks…

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Watch: Citi Field Tour

by D.J. Short on February 13th, 2008 at 4:29 pm

John Delcos of the Journal News posted a video of yesterday’s tour of Citi Field, via Bryan Heyman, which you can watch by clicking here.

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News: Phillies Sign Benson

by Chris Mazzone on February 13th, 2008 at 4:27 pm

MLB.com is reporting that RHP Kris Benson has agreed to a minor league contract with the Philadelphia Phillies.

…if the Phillies thought they had a psychological edge before, then this should really put them over the top… i mean psycho…anna benson…i’m just sayin’…

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Read: Phillies In Mets Heads?

by Mike Nichols on February 13th, 2008 at 3:15 pm

In his most recent column for Phillyburbs.com, Mike Sielski writes as spring training approaches, the Phillies, due to their dominance over the Mets in 2007, enter the season with a ‘psychological edge’ over their National League East rival.

Sielski even goes as far to suggest the Mets mental struggle against the Phillies drove them to acquire Johan Santana, writing…

“A similar force drove the Mets’ trade for Santana, for a two-time Cy Young winner, for an elite left-handed pitcher the Mets can use to counteract Chase Utley and Ryan Howard. Make no mistake: As much as their rotation required improvement, the Mets shelled out $150 million for Santana for the sake of their clubhouse’s collective confidence.”

…whoa, mike, way to jump to conclusions…first off, the Mets did not acquire santana because they are scared to face the Phillies left-handed batters…they acquired santana because they desperately needed a number one starter…however, of course, santana should do a great job neutralizing the likes of utley and howard, but this moves was not solely based on the reasons you provided…

…secondly, sir, i highly doubt, as your spin suggests, the Phillies are in the Mets heads…yes, when David Wright says the Phillies are the team to beat this year, this may imply your suggestion, but come on, mike, you know just as well as i do, wright was just saying the right thing…

…and, as you note, the Phillies did play a part in the Mets collapse down the stretch last season, by defeating them eight consecutive times, but no one, except for perhaps their own doubts got in the Mets heads last season…and, yes, the Mets do have their own demons to expel this season, but in no part does that have anything to do with the Phillies

…lastly, what is with these philly writers of late…first, Rich Hoffman of the Philadelphia Daily News reeked of jealously with his coverage of the santana press conference, now this…

…to me it looks like perhaps the Mets are getting in the heads of Phillies fans…

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Q&A: Kevin Goldstein on Mets Hitting Prospects

by Jordan Zakarin on February 13th, 2008 at 2:01 pm

Last week at Baseball Prospectus, prospect guru Kevin Goldstein announced his Top 11 Prospect List for the Mets.

i had the chance to talk quite extensively with Kevin about the Mets organization, his rankings and the draft…it’s a long interview, so i broke it up in to three parts…the first of which ran yesterday, which dealt with the team’s overall system and the coming draft…today i will talk with him about the team’s position prospects, and tomorrow i will talk with him about the pitchers…

To subscribe to Baseball Prospectus, click here.

Jordan Zakarin: You rank Wilmer Flores very high, but he hasn’t gotten the attention other recent Latin signees got for the Mets, like Fernando Martinez and Deolis Guerra. He’s already a huge kid; how does he compare to guys like Martinez and the Giants’ Angel Villalona, and what can we expect to see from him? Is he on a similar fast track?

Kevin Goldstein: I’m not sure he deserves the same attention. Martinez was the top international talent the year he signed, and Guerra was arguably the top arm. Flores is more of one of the better international talents, and those guys tend to not get as much heat. He’s not really in Villalona’s class, remember that Villalona got three times as much money, and probably could have gotten even more if he played it differently.

Flores is a very good talent, but those guys had elite-level reports when they hit the market. Timetable wise, they’re not the same, Flores will just get some GCL at-bats this year, and nothing is decided beyond that.

Jordan Zakarin: But at such a young age, and given his size, it does seem like the sky is the limit for a guy like him, even if it’s way beyond in the future.

Kevin Goldstein: Sure, he has a very high ceiling, and that’s why he’s fourth on the list. It says something about his talent, as well as something about the Mets system.

Jordan Zakarin: On that same thread, while skimping on the draft, the Mets have put some heavy emphasis on their Latin signees – who else in the organization has a chance to make a big jump onto the 2009 Top 11 list? 3B Jeffry Marte, maybe the other, younger Pedro Martinez?

Kevin Goldstein: On a tools level, I’d still take Pena or Legares over those two.

Jordan Zakarin: What’s the word on Legares?

Kevin Goldstein: He’s still very young, and very impressive on a tools/athleticism basis. Like Pena, he turned out to be more than a little too raw to be ready for a full-season league last year, but the talent is definitely still there.

Jordan Zakarin: Okay, well turning to the headliner of the Mets’ Latin efforts, how good can Fernando Martinez be, and is this the year he starts putting up the type of numbers people expect?

Kevin Goldstein: If anyone knew that, they’d be rich.

Jordan Zakarin: Can you give me odds then, so I can make that bet?

Kevin Goldstein: Some think he can, but some thought he would in 2007, no? There are people out there who still think he’s a monster prospect, with true impact potential. Yes the age/level thing is a huge mitigating factor, but it can also only take you so far. I think he’d be best served with a return to Double-A, where he’ll still probably be the youngest guy in the league. You want odds? What type of numbers do people expect?

Jordan Zakarin: True, it’s hard to predict the future. But in a few years, when he’s presumably a big leaguer, what can Mets fans expect out of him?

Kevin Goldstein: That’s the thing with him, and why he’s a four-star guy instead of a five. There are scouts and officials out there who think he’s a future MVP candidate. There are scouts and officials out there who think he’s a solid left-fielder at best. His projection is still very wide-ranging.

Jordan Zakarin: What causes the chasm? Does he lack something some people project him to have?

Kevin Goldstein: The chasm is the fact that the performance just hasn’t caught up to the tools yet. Some people think he can hit 30+ home runs a year, yet he hit four last year.

Jordan Zakarin: One ‘07 pick, 1B Lucas Duda, really seemed to surprise with his production last year. Thoughts on him?

Kevin Goldstein: He’s a weird guy. I mean he was a big, big talent coming out of high school, and in college, he did pretty much nothing. So we really need to see more before we get too excited.

Jordan Zakarin: Do some hitters just do better as pros than in college, for whatever reason? Wood versus metal, etc?

Kevin Goldstein: That list is very, very small. Minute, even.

Jordan Zakarin: Tools-wise, is he someone to keep an eye on?

Kevin Goldstein: Sure, but only because he’s in the Mets system, and there aren’t a lot of other options. Just remember, he’s a first-baseman, and he’s 22 years old and proven nothing. If you can’t project him as an every day big leaguer with a .850 or .900 OPS, what is he then?

Jordan Zakarin: Another 1B, who just missed your list, Nick Evans, put up good numbers in the FSL at a more age appropriate level.

Kevin Goldstein: He did indeed. Scouts just aren’t really on him. He’s a really solid hitter, but again, you are talking about a first baseman, and a right-handed one at that. Those guys don’t need to put up good numbers to be good prospects, they need to put up GREAT numbers.

Jordan Zakarin: So he really needs to prove it at every level, as well.

Kevin Goldstein: Not just prove it, IMprove it. .286/.374/.476 is good, maybe even really good, but if you’re going to be a first baseman, you have to be elite.

Jordan Zakarin: Even in the FSL? That surely holds stats down

Kevin Goldstein: Those are good numbers there — they’re not elite-level though.

Jordan Zakarin: And the other first base prospect, Mike Carp, had a real bad year, but then he gets named to the AFL top prospect team. What gives?

Kevin Goldstein: You got me, because he did next to nothing in the Arizona Fall League, hitting .243 without a single home run in over 107 at-bats. Scouts I speak to see a lack of back speed, and a profound inability to doing anything at all against lefthanders. I know I’m sounding like a broken record here, but first base prospects can’t have any offensive weaknesses.

Jordan Zakarin: So there’s no real confidence that he can have a bounce back year?

Kevin Goldstein: Not a ton. I’d wager that he’s better, but not better enough.

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Buzz: Mets, Perez Headed to Arbitration

by D.J. Short on February 13th, 2008 at 1:32 pm

At his blog for Newsday, David Lennon reports that the Mets and LHP Oliver Perez have scheduled an arbitration hearing for February 21st in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Thus far, Perez has asked for $6.5 million, while the Mets have offered $4.725 million.

If the scheduled arbitration hearing takes place, as expected, it will be the Mets first arbitration hearing in 16 years, according to Lennon.

…i keep getting emails from people wondering why the Mets haven’t yet locked Perez up long-term…well, his agent is Scott Boras, so the chances of him not testing the open market at the end of the season are somewhere in the range of slim and none…and honestly, while certainly understandable, it is a risky proposition for Boras and his client, as Cerrone has written in the past…i mean, what happens if Perez gets injured or implodes…

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Blog: Mets Arrive at PSL

by Regis Courtemanche on February 13th, 2008 at 1:32 pm

At his blog for the Daily News, Adam Rubin notes who has shown up to Port St. Lucie already.

Position players Brian Schneider and David Wright have arrived.

As for pitchers, Oliver Perez, John Maine, Joe Smith, Duaner Sanchez, Mike Pelfrey, Juan Padilla and Carlos Muniz are among those in attendance.

…thanks to Hot Foot for the link…

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